A picketing dispute brings the church and its opposition, led
by Robert S. Minton, to court again.

By THOMAS C. TOBIN
St. Petersburg Times
February 8, 2000

ST. PETERSBURG -- As he took his seat Monday to referee yet another
dispute between the Church of Scientology and its critics, Pinellas-Pasco
Circuit Judge Thomas E. Penick Jr. already wore the look of frustration.

He looked to the front tables manned by six lawyers -- two for the church
and four representing Robert S. Minton, the New England millionaire who
has opened an office in Clearwater to crusade full-time against the
church.

He looked out behind them, where a dozen Minton followers sat on one side
and a handful of Scientology executives sat on the other.

Then Penick smiled and shook his head like a confounded parent.

He repeatedly wondered aloud during the four-hour hearing whether it was
possible to quell a dispute that has tied up the Clearwater Police
Department and spilled onto streets and sidewalks in the heart of
downtown.

When it was over, Penick said he would decide Wednesday whether eight
associates of Minton should be prohibited from walking within 10 feet of
17 church properties in Clearwater.

In a ruling Dec. 2, the judge placed the 10-foot rule on Minton and any of
his "officers, agents, servants, employees." The ruling followed an Oct.
31 confrontation in which Minton was charged with misdemeanor battery.
Since then, Minton, a 53-year-old retired investment banker, has
established an office with a full-time staff and a board of directors.
Many of them have been picketing within the 10-foot zone. The church says
they should be considered Minton's "agents."

Most of the picketing has taken place just outside the church's dining
halls along Watterson Avenue, a side street off Cleveland Street.

"The police are in a pickle," said Scientology attorney F. Wallace Pope
Jr. "They're having to guess who this injunction is in force against."

Pope argued that the church had been in Clearwater 25 years. He asked the
judge to balance its "First Amendment religious assembly rights" against
those of the "group of newcomers" led by Minton.

But Minton attorney Bruce G. Howie argued: "Just because these people are
associated with Mr. Minton in some way does not mean they should be
enjoined." The church also asked Penick to sanction a "safety zone"
established by Clearwater police.

The zone is marked by two white lines at the dining hall doors where
church buses unload for meals. The lines run across Watterson Avenue and
sidewalks on both sides of the street.